| Paid Work and Domestic Labor in Disadvantaged Communities on the Outskirts of Beirut, Lebanon | ||
| Rima R. Habib & Iman A. Nuwayhid & Joumana S. Yeretzian | ||
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Abstract |
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This article explored the association between
economic activity and the contribution to domestic labor in
a Middle Eastern society. Analyses were carried out on crosssectional
survey data from 5,998 individuals, aged between
18 and 64 years, in three poor communities in the suburbs of
Beirut, Lebanon. Domestic labor was evaluated with a
composite index that takes into account both the type of task
performed and the level of involvement. Housework categories
included core household chores, care giving, financial
management, home management, and home/car maintenance.
Results showed that women continue to do most of
the domestic labor in the three communities. However,
women’s load of domestic labor decreased as they joined the
labor market, whereas men’s contribution to domestic labor
increased with involvement in paid work. Relatively speaking,
the difference in contribution to housework between
house members engaged and not engaged in paid labor was
much higher for women than it was for men.
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| Sex Roles (2006) 55:321–329 | ||